Microphones 541
to control this situation was through the choice of
microphones having different variations of the polar
pattern versus frequency. With the DSP-4P processor,
nearly ideal directional characteristics can be selected,
and nearly any frequency-dependent directional charac-
teristic that may be desired—e.g., a cardioid becomes
omnidirectional below the midrange, so that it has better
response at the very lowest frequencies. Also modeling
a large-diaphragm microphone is possible.
Furthermore, in excessively reverberant spaces one
could record a drier sound (cardioid or supercardioid
setting) or, in spaces that are dry, accept more room
reflections (wide cardioid or omni setting) in the corre-
sponding frequency range.
In such cases it is not the frequency response but
rather the ratio of direct to reflected sound, that will be
altered. That cannot be done with an equalizer nor can a
reverb unit reduce the degree of reflected sound after
the fact.
In the arrangement of Fig. 16-107, an omnidirec-
tional microphone with a mild high-frequency emphasis
in the direct sound field is used. Because of its angle of
orientation, the capsule has ideal directional response in
the horizontal plane; the high-frequency emphasis
compensates for the high-frequency losses due to lateral
sound incidence.
A figure 8 microphone is set directly above the
omni. The direction to which it is aimed will determine
the orientation of the resulting adjustable virtual micro-
phone. The hemispherical device attached to the top of
the figure 8 flattens the response of the omnidirectional
microphone at the highest frequencies.
Figure 16-106. Hemicardioid polar pickup pattern for a
Shure AMS surface microphone. Courtesy Shure Incorpo-
rated.
Legend
150 o
120 o
90 o
60 o
30 o
0
30 o
60 o
90 o
120 o
150 o
180 o
20 dB
dB
Legend
1000 Hz
200 Hz
5000 Hz
A. Side view
120 o
150 o
0 o^180 o
30 o
60 o
90 o
dB
dB
dB
Surface plane
1000 Hz
250 Hz
500 Hz
B. Top view
dB
dB
20 dB
Figure 16-107. A Schoeps PolarFlex microphone with an
omnidirectional and a figure 8 microphone. Courtesy
Schoeps GmbH.